The Conservative Party yesterday proposed a national inquiry into money laundering in real estate. It follows a 2018 recommendation from the Commons finance committee that Parliament consider sanctions against lawyers suspected of aiding corrupt clients: "Government has an important role to play."
Mis-Measurement Cost $45K
A Department of Foreign Affairs art project in Paris went $45,000 over budget after staff incorrectly measured a wall, according to Access To Information records. The department amended the contract three times: "Canada’s diplomacy, culture and values will shine."
Ex-Lib Minister Sues Cabinet
A former Liberal cabinet minister is challenging cabinet in Federal Court over a national broadcasting license given to Rogers Media Inc. Cabinet earlier dismissed appeals over the granting of a lucrative ethnic TV license: "The decision defies logic."
Defy ‘Pressure’ On GM Food
Federal regulators will resist any “pressure” to force labeling of genetically engineered foods, says a cabinet memo. Staff in Access To Information records estimate nearly three-quarters of processed foods sold in Canada have engineered ingredients: "Labeling would create increased costs."
Gov’t Historical Claim False
A federal tribute to Indigenous “kindness of spirit” in a historical story is unverified, based on hearsay and contradicted by archival records, says an award-winning filmmaker. The claim reported as fact by the Department of Public Works and CBC is contrary to all documentary evidence regarding the Komagata Maru incident, said the researcher: "The evidence is extremely clear."
Seek Racial Stats On Students
The Department of Social Development is compiling race-based statistics on student loan defaulters. Private consultants will be hired to conduct the unusual survey “outside the realm” of federal research: "The purpose of the survey will be to enrich the information collected from other sources."
Count 3,000,000 Wild Pigs
Canada needs a wild pig strategy to combat feral animals that may number in the millions, say Access To Information records at the Department of Agriculture. Biologists blame escaped wild Russian boars: "It is a problem."
Cabinet Drops Handgun Ban
Cabinet has dropped any plans for a national handgun ban. A Liberal-appointed senator said Parliament should introduce a buy-back program for owners of 839,000 licensed handguns nationwide: "I’m really hoping the next Parliament will take some action."
Sunday Poem: “Tabby Cat”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “I see her taking her last breaths. Body frail, she gently grabs my hand as I pat her. ‘Cancer,’ the vet said…”
‘Socially-Sanctioned Racism’
Clowning in blackface at public events shows the depths of systemic racism in Canada, says the chair of the Senate human rights committee. “I didn’t sleep very well last night,” said Senator Wanda Thomas Bernard (Independent-N.S.), an African-Canadian and former professor at Dalhousie University’s School of Social Work. “It weighed heavily on my mind. I felt a sense of hopelessness.”
Indifferent To Food Fight
Consumers paid little attention to political protests over the billion-dollar Canada Food Guide, says in-house research by the Department of Agriculture. Shoppers surveyed in five cities said they look at price, not health claims, at the grocery store: "Few seek any specific attributes when shopping for food."
Half A Billion For Seniors
The Parliamentary Budget Office yesterday said a Conservative Party hike in tax credits for pensioners would cost more than half a billion next year. The cost of the Age Tax Credit is already projected to top $4 billion for the first time in 2020: "Seniors will benefit."
Greens To Cut Pot Prices
The Green Party yesterday proposed to repeal the GST on medical cannabis and lower legal prices for recreational marijuana. Cabinet had grossly overestimated cannabis tax revenues at up to $1 billion a year, according to Access To Information records: "We should be growing cannabis in open fields."
Seek Urgent Vaping Order
The Canadian Medical Association yesterday appealed to cabinet for an emergency ban on marketing of vaping products. Cabinet partially regulated vaping in a bill one senator called a “leap of faith”.
Costly Loans To The ‘Lonely’
Taxpayers have lost nearly $14 million in bad loans to “lonely” borrowers, says an internal audit by the Department of Industry. The Futurpreneur Canada program concealed data confirming as many as 19 percent of borrowers defaulted on easy-term loans at public expense: "Data may not be accurate."



